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  • President's Meeting with Pope Paul (Dec. 2J, 196$) (from J. Valenti's notes) - Bresident gave the Pope an aide memoire. It noted t he Pope's appeal for a bombing halt. "My country has tried this path before. I would not exclude the possibility that it may
  • Paul VI, Pope, 1897-1978
  • Folder, "[December 23, 1967 - 8:50 p.m. Meeting with Pope Paul]," Meeting Notes Files, Box 2
  • Subject: Vietnam In view of the public demonstrations and difficulties that have been evidenced in Vietnam in recent weeks, His Eminence, Amleto Cardinal Cicognani, Secretary of State of His Holiness, Pope Paul VI, wishes to make note of the fact
  • Paul VI, Pope, 1897-1978
  • Paul VI, Pope, 1897-1978
  • though their the ARVNwill be strong, escalate in parts But on US forces. achieve a complete victory. vis We doubt in a se1·i6us weakening of the CNN/ARVNapparatus result will areas. to mal
  • . Thompson says ought to see Dobrynin about time Shelepin leaves. .· President: I­ _•VI ~ .' \ ' a.... ........ IT.LZZD SET SANITIZ3D 2 Meeting of January 3, 1966 .. Next prob. is whether we send Harriman to Japan. Bundy: We've been playing
  • world. I would have the Pope or U Thant suggest the bombing halt. It cannot come from the President. A bombing halt would quieten the situation here at home. Cy Vance: Ball. McGeorge Bundy stated my views. I agree with George Me"ETIUG NOTES
  • of North Vietnam_cou ld be stopped if we got in retu rn a symmetrical de - escalation . Secretary Rusk: probes : Responded to th e President's request to revi e w our peace We have u n dertaken dozens of probes . We have been in touch with the Pope
  • Walt Rostow George Christian Tom Johnson l ,..· .. MEETIMS HOT~~. r·g14yp1G8I~D ~lic.Jti:--. • .uires -Pet mist.ion or Copyright Holder. W: The,..•• ~e~A1on ..... P..':I (£SI Vi£/V L .. . .: -- - - ­ - ., /(~. 5
  • , Fc~h m·13r De lhi, Tehra n, Ca i ro nnd Da e::;kok. He l enven D:meko'k early to:norrm-J c:.ornin:; for Tokyo and ~1ill p~oc•;ed fr om t here to Cimbcrra Bnd Saigon. (b) Arthur Gol clbc!:g h~n visited the Pope , Sarag!lt, Horo, li'anf'ani, DcGt:ullc
  • - - Mr. Paul Geren 1 .::SECRET Mro Paul Geren, Deputy Directorp Office of International Financial and Development Affairs, Department of State; Dro William No Diehl, Chief, Far East Divigion Office of International Finance, Department of Treaau.ry
  • .Tlf'ue iato om- actions d.ca11~t.1 • MO CQQI~ ot ~,-~ Vi ('C~Uft aumnrc,u'""'10ft, ... o.c tt eomrt at 7 \IJ' av.~n. to, 20,0CX>t l e,nPTwru,1,r coat:I ). J,oht. 0 t.e lllll:lm-a tor --- k. .c.an to t.n
  • . The general feeling is. to press forward with this program. Douglas Dillon and McGeorge Bundy agreed that South Vietnam should and must do more. Walt Ros tow said South Vi~tnam must improve administration, fight corruption and be more aggressive
  • ~, -,,., ~-~·--~,....--....,..~>•--·-.,~•-·.··~J· • • - - • ·,;.:·• "! ~:--·..• • •• _- ! ••••• ., ...... • •• •. •• • ·- ... ·:- .·.1 •• •• ...• .• 1 17. 32. Ambassador Bunker's last words before ._Ileft Saigon V:'ere, "If we stay ~vi~~ -~t, we will come out all right
  • dent-elect R i c h a r d M. Nixon, brought his mother­ in-law as well as his bride, Nancy. He introduced Mrs. Paul Moore, of Aiken, S.C., Nancy's mother, and pulled Mr s. Moore into all the pic­ t ures. Sen. Thurmond , 66, told everyone how lucky he
  • usociated them Jea11--Paul and the Yugoslav , well known 00°aided popaaa.diaili cleao o-f the proje~t •f ·ti. poup wu al•• ..,..ened d d.\e "~ln • sponaon • majo-r aour@e •f actioa ,,.e Seqhn A,6) The pres~ig~ publie • of t:he ''Berlltrand
  • carried with him a letter from the Papal Delegate and also from the Bishop of Saigon, apparently praising the actions in upsetting the Diem government. Lodge said he saw dangers of an anti-Christian move and this was his purpose in seeing the Pope . He
  • -ding the meeting we re: The President The Vice President Secretary of State Rusk Secretary of Defense McNamara Under Secretary of Defense Paul Nitze Under Secretary of State Katzenbach Assistant Secretary of State Lucius Battle Secretary
  • . ·en the other hand, hia d'!ensh'ea have also been costly to the U.S. and especially the GVN. Furthermore, the battle is not yet over. VI. In :re-cognition of thls ne\v situation, additional troops are des-irable: · -- to pursue the enemy's de!eat
  • : Ti'le Outlook in Vi etnm1 L This l;!em.orandum.does not seek to explore of the sitm.tion a long term. in Vietnam, whether developments involve a con.tinu.?,tion a level comparable is more probable but it Saigon, the indcfini a,t
  • Banner into area where Pueblo was seized. Seizing a North Korean vessel. Limited blockade of North Korean naval vessels. 3. Moves to strengthen our basic military Note: items. We reviewed with Paul Nitze Sec. McNamara will report posture
  • · . CAPABILITY Itl SOU'f ij VIETNA~ BY It--'TERO!CTING HIS ROADS ."'" AtJD DESTROYING SUBSTANTIAL AMOUNTS OF HIS MUNITIONS AND SUPPLIES · &FORE .THEY REACH SOUTH VI!TNAM. IN . ..- .. .. ~ .~ ~ · .. ':.· " - •...;·.. -:ft
  • Coaaunists in Vi tnam will be iven gr:~ter weight in U-$ d cistons than h retofore. Despite Vice.Presidentvs stress on economic and social measui:-es to acccmpany military action, w think Diem ill be inclitled to put main stress on military side
  • on these questions in conjunction with the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Walt Rostow: That is correct. Clark Clifford: Paul Nitze and I started to work on this Friday night. As you could understand, with the time pressure we placed upon ourselves there still may need
  • in this connection is membership in the United Nations. 2. West Atrica is probably the f'asteat changing area in the world today. New countries are springing up vi th startling rapidity and the people of the area are determined that control ot West Africa
  • aw11' ewos io ..:r ....., ....... D ST.' PAUL PIONEER PRESS September ·, 16, 1967 Editorials Credibility Gap Widens Discrepancies between what the John­ son Administration says publicly about lts Vietnam war policies and what it actually. does
  • it was written in 1969-7~, and thus in the interest of historical would be well advised to check with accuracy users me before citing it, certainly on any controversial point. Sincerely, / tt I• /J I. vi:. PROCESSING NOTE Several pages in this manuscript
  • significant_ them. i.:onsequences, that With the on sources government as public actions order security plans to be sure and back to a Kennedy directive As ~as aa:me it ~ein~ an attempt covert had been extremely Vi~tnamese Vietnamese
  • • . . . . . . . • • • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . vi • • • • • • • LIST OF PARTICIPANTS • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••• Biographical Sketches . . .. GAME SUMMARY• • • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . GAME COMMENTARY . .... .... .. . ... GAME DIRECTOR'SREMARKS VIDEO TAPE SUMMARY. SENIORDISCUSSION
  • a n t, the Pope, and the thoug htful p re s s ; and th a t we be sp e c ific a lly re sp o n siv e thro ug h se c re t channels by exp loring a c tive ly the p o s s ib ilitie s fo r a negotiated so lu tio n w ith the B r i t i s h , the R u s s ia n s